I love Gmail, but it’s getting a little spooky

Google’s Web-based e-mail program is far better than any other Web mail program I’ve ever encountered. There’s a lot to like:

  • Way more storage than other programs
  • Superior searchability
  • Nested threads make it easy to see a lot more correspondence at a glance
  • Labeling and archiving is simple and effective
  • Integrated chat
  • Awesome spam filtering

All in all, it’s an incredibly powerful program that saves me a lot of time and effort. And I’m sure it’s going to sync well when I get around to going more mobile with my email. So I’ve been switching my other email accounts over to Gmail, and during this process it’s become apparent that Google knows a LOT about me, my habits, even my patterns of thought.

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Will you miss newspapers when they're gone?

The first time I saw The Christian Science Monitor, I expected it to be chock full of wing-nut proselytizing, like, say, The Watchtower, that curious piece of rubbish the Jehovah’s Witnesses leave behind after you shoo them off your front porch.

What a pleasant shock it was, back in the day, to discover that this little broadsheet was a respectable, serious newspaper that publishes insightful exposes and often breaks major national stories. And they even had reading rooms, where you could wander in off the street, sit down in a quiet place and read the paper (or the religious books they provided) — how cool is that?

Yesterday the CSM announced that after 100 years, it will stop producing its newsprint edition and publish only on the Web. It finally makes too much sense economically and environmentally not to do that, and it’s only a matter of time before other national publications follow suit.

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When do you call it a crash?

And that would be Crash with a capital C.

With the Dow Jones Industrial Average bumping around below 9,000 after the worst week in about 85 years, people are wondering what it all means — what’s going to happen, when will this begin to really affect us?

While it seems to have happened so swiftly, some have seen this coming for months and years. But dire predictions of a dystopian future don’t sell very well — it’s not what people want to hear, and they tend to turn the channel.

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